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Yes, well done Taps, a full-house. (A roux is used to thicken a sauce).
Four minutes!! What was the record?
Blinding.
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
Aah, that makes sense! Gaspard de la Nuit is one of my favourite works. And Gaspard was also the name of a brother of the great great uncle who met Saint Saens. Associations aplenty.
What H connects a popular composer born in 1915, a Vivaldi-inspired harpsichordist and something of the night?
Unfortunately I can't repay the tribute by offering a clean sweep, but I think this could be Howard.
Howard Beach is the harpsichordist with the group Red Priest, after Vivaldi;
Bart Howard wrote a number of standards inc. Fly Me To the Moon;
But the third ? I don't think it is the dreadful Howard Goodall who would never write anything about darkness, nor the more-redeemable Howard Hanson, possibly Howard Skempton? Perhaps not a composer, Howard Shelley? Shelley and the night? Nah...
What H connects a popular composer born in 1915, a Vivaldi-inspired harpsichordist and something of the night?
Oooh, elegant!
As for the answer...
EDIT: Yes I found Bart Howard, but as I'd never heard of him, I dismissed him
As for the night: Howard Shore? He wrote the music for the somewhat nocturnal Silence of the Lambs, the Lord of the Rings trilogy... oh and Scorcese's 'comedy' After Hours - that was about a night in New York...???
EDIT 2: apparently not
Last edited by Nick Armstrong; 06-04-11, 12:54.
Reason: Inspired by rubbers's cross-posting... then dashed by Tapiola's ditto
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
Howard Beach is the harpsichordist with the group Red Priest, after Vivaldi;
Bart Howard wrote a number of standards inc. Fly Me To the Moon;
But the third ? I don't think it is the dreadful Howard Goodall who would never write anything about darkness, nor the more-redeemable Howard Hanson, possibly Howard Skempton? Perhaps not a composer, Howard Shelley? Shelley and the night? Nah...
Very nice work, rubbernecker. You are almost there. The 3rd Howard is not a composer, nor a musician of any kind.
Dammit - that was the first thing I thought of faced with rubbers's G... Promptly forgot it
I still think that Howard Shore fits too, thanks to his After Hours score...
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
What I links a composer born in Russia (not Germany) with another who sounds perfectly content, and a London-based musical director? (All three died in the latter half of the last century)
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